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Congressman Schiff, Secretary Rice Discuss Armenian Genocide Resolut

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  • Congressman Schiff, Secretary Rice Discuss Armenian Genocide Resolut

    CONGRESSMAN SCHIFF, SECRETARY RICE DISCUSS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION DURING HEARING ON CAPITOL HILL

    Arminfo
    2007-03-22 14:46:00

    In a hearing today before the State, Foreign Operations Appropriations
    Subcommittee in the House of Representatives, lawmakers raised a
    series of concerns regarding past and current genocides, reports the
    Armenian Assembly of America.

    Specifically, Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA) raised pointed questions
    regarding the Administration's opposition to H. Res. 106, which he
    introduced in January, and that reaffirms the historical fact of
    the Armenian Genocide and recalls the proud chapter of humanitarian
    intervention by the United States.

    The bipartisan legislation is cosponsored by more than 180 Members
    of Congress, and is buoyed by the recent introduction of a similar
    bill in the Senate by Assistant Majority Leader Richard Durbin (D-IL)
    and Senator John Ensign (R-NV).

    In a spirited exchange, Schiff asked Secretary of State Condoleezza
    Rice how the U.S., if unwilling to recognize the Armenian Genocide as
    such, has the "moral authority that we need to condemn the genocide
    in Darfur if we do not acknowledge those atrocities that occurred
    earlier..." Schiff continued, "Is there any doubt in your mind?"

    "I think the historical circumstances require that we allow historical
    commissions to explore this issue and come to terms with their past,"
    Rice answered.

    "You come from academia, is there anything in your background or
    training that would leave you to believe that this murder of 1.5
    million people was not a genocide?" he asked.

    "Yes, I do come from academia, but now I am secretary of state,"
    Rice explained. "I think that the Armenians and the Turks need to
    resolve their past before they can move forward."

    "When Hrant Dink is murdered on his doorstep, when the Turkish
    government moves to bring him up on charges of 'insulting Turkishness,'
    I don't see Turkey as being a democracy that signifies progress,"
    Schiff explained.

    "I do think there is an evolution going on in Turkey," Rice
    replied. "Like many historical tragedies, people need to deal with
    their past." Rice also added this: "Congressman, we have recognized
    the historical circumstances [and] we do recognize it in Presidential
    statements."

    Schiff, in a second round of questioning, said "urging the Congress
    to igno re [the Armenian Genocide] or abide by Turkish Article 301"
    is not the solution. "We should encourage Turkey to acknowledge the
    undeniable facts of the Armenian Genocide." Schiff also noted that
    the U.S. does not support commissions to study Holocaust denial and
    that we should not get into the business of historical commissions.

    Executive Director Bryan Ardouny, who attended today's hearing, thanked
    Congressman Schiff for raising this important human rights issue.

    "We have a fundamental policy disagreement with the Administration,"
    Ardouny said. "We cannot allow Turkey's insidious Article 301, which
    penalizes discussion of the Armenian Genocide, to be exported to the
    U.S. Further, calls to establish an historical commission to study
    the Armenian Genocide ignore the existing scholarship. Every serious
    study on the events of 1915 has reached the same conclusion. The fact
    of the Armenian Genocide is incontestable."

    Ardouny added that 126 Holocaust and genocide scholars have declared
    the genocide an incontestable fact. Furthermore, the International
    Center for Transitional Justice released a legal study on the use of
    the term Armenian Genocide, which states that: "The Events, viewed
    collectively, can thus be said to include all of the elements of the
    crime of genocide as defined in the Convention, and legal scholars as
    well as historians, politicians, journalists and other people would
    be justified in continuing to so describe them."

    "I was disappointed that Secretary of State Rice was unwilling to
    acknowledge the plain facts of the Armenian Genocide," Schiff told
    the Assembly. "We cannot maintain the moral force we need to take
    action against the genocide going on in Darfur, if the Administration
    continues to equivocate about the genocide against the Armenians."
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